INTERESTING OPERATION . TrantfuVion of Blood Soees . fally Performed Upsnal ounsr jUadjr . The readers of this paper will remember the report of an . intefeBtang experiment of transfosing , blood Into th * veinaof- adog , performed at Knsh Hedioal OoUege last WeVmesday by Dr * . -Freer and Hunt . The carotid artery 6 f ; the animal waBjaevered and the blood aUo . wed ; to run oot nntil the subject was apparently lifeless . An incision was then made in the jugular vein , and the blood was injected back into the animal s system , with the effect of restoring toim to fife . -, ¦ The « eeount of this interesting experiment given to the Post was noticed by the friendsrof a young lady in Iowa , and had been for some time wasting away . with disease supposed to be consumption , and they sent to Dr . Freer to eome and make the experiment of transfusing blood into her system . Dr . Hunt , of the Faculty of tho Rush College , responded to the- call , and found the patient in a very low condit...

CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY . SENATE—Feb . 7—Resolutions of Georgia Legislature accepting ; conditions imposed by Congress and ratifying 14 th and 18 th amendments were received . —Edmund , from Committee on-Pensiou . reported adversely to grunting pension , ttfeoldiers of 1812 who were not disab . ed . —Bills were 1 jtroduced and reported as follows : granting * tenda for railroads from Kansas and Missouri to Paefno coast { to establish aline of American mail steamers , and reducing rates of postage ; granting lands for railroad , in Florida ; for the establishment of steamship mailservlce with Sandwich Islands and Australia ; extending the privileges of the Civil Bights act ; to encourage telegraph communication between . Eastern and Western continents : for relief of the inhabitants of Utah . —The bill to relieve from importunity and to preserve the independence of the several departments of thegovernment was diecussed at some length , and the Census bill taken up . . The . death of Re...

CURRENT PARAGRAPHS . . Personal Notes , — Lord John Russell has published his antobiagraphy . ; . ; ¦? . ¦ - P ^* 111 - translation of Homer s Iliad will be published next v / eefc ;; .: —Vanderbilt denies that -he is a silent partner in the firm of Claflin , Woodhull &amp;amp; company . —Joe . Hooker was defore the Cincinnati Police court the other day for assault and battery . - —Mr , Hoag ; the lately deceased Congressman from the Toledo district , left an estate worth nearly $ 1 , 000 , 000 . - —D . O . Hill , formerly a telegrapher at Cleveland , Ohio , has been for ten . years confined to his chair by rheumatism , nnableto stand or walk ; and . in that plight , has mastered several languages and the law , ^ andiuia be en-. admittod to praotioe at the Ashtabula county coutt . —The Emperor of the French is now one of tho largest landed proprietors in Spain . He has been buying land in that country for the last ten years . —The student Ivanoff , who recently betrayed the grea...

. ; ^ staeHaBBsssBssm T ^ A DETECflYE STORY . • - Operatiaaia of SB \ caB &amp;gt; Thlevea —How - ¦ Merchants are Kottlted . [ From the New York Poet . ) . . Not very long ago a lady , in widow s weeds , accompanied by a gentleman said to be her brother , came to New York , and en- - gaged a house in Fourth - street . Her rich - areasand re finement of manner , combined Witt great personal attractions , rendered her neighbors most desirous of obtaining an introduction to her , and curiosity was rife as to whetp she came from and who she was . Her brother , for he really stood in that relationship to her , was a young man . enjoying the command of ready money to -aoonsiderable amount , who easily made ¦ • • equaintances among others of his own age . His manners were very pleasing , and kis demeanor was polished , while his at- . tire , though extremely quiet andunpretehding , was always in the best possible taste . So favorable was the impression . which he cjeated in tho minds o...

Miscellaneous Items . —Boston , Mass . is having another run o ! sleighing . ¦ —The Boston Roman Catholic cathedral will cost over $ 5 , 000 , 000 . ¦ —The At hoi forest in Scotland has 30 ,- 000 deer in the 80 , 000 acres . —The wheat crops in all parts of Tennessee ore looking fine . —The insurance on the Great Eastern and her cargo of cable is $ 3 , 500 , 000 . —Iuka , Mississipi , has obtained $ 50 , 000 to establish a cotton factory at that place . —Four hundred cords of white beechwood are annually cut up into shoe pegs at Wilton , Me . —There are 25 divorce cases pending at the present term of the Rutland county Vermont supreme court —Detroit has imported this . winter from Kentucky and Tennessee , several hundred possums for colored epicures . —New Xbrk papers speak of the storm of the 8 th as the first great snow storm of the season along the Atlantic coast . —Rich deposits of iron ore have been found on the line of the Knoxville and Kentucky railroad , some ten miles from ...

ANOTHER SHADOWED ALTAR . BETROTHED , WEDDED , DIVORCED . BY •&amp;lt; NED BUNTLINB . Is this the point ? Are -yon enre that the beantifnl stranger will pass here ? Yes . Each day for a week past she has galloped up this bridle path , on the same thoroughbred ho se , riding with a fearless grace . She is beautiful in face , exquisite id form . By fair meanq or foul , I will possess her , for my very soul is in chains since I first set eyes upon her . I have striven in vain to learn who she is . Mounter ! as well as tho best cavalier in the park , I sought to trace her home , three times observing that I foilowed , ene has eluded me—her horse outstripping mine , and yet , each day , I see her here again and look on some beauty I had not seen before . * * The two who thus conversed etond holding their horses by the side of one of the romantic bridle-patha in the Central Park . They were first-class gamblers , Leslie Durant and Frank Belphor by name , partners in one of the great ga...